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Diaspora Figures | Francois Duvalier
Francois Duvalier
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois_Duvalier
François
Duvalier known as "Papa Doc" (c. April 14, 1907 - April
21, 1971) was the President of Haiti from 1957 and later dictator
(President for Life) from 1964 until his death. His rule was marked
by autocracy, corruption, and reliance on private armies to maintain
power.
History
Early life
Born in Port-au-Prince to a family from Martinique,
he was raised and trained as a doctor, serving in rural areas. There
he won acclaim for helping the poor fight typhus and other diseases.
He married Simone Ovide in 1939, and became director general of
the national health service in 1946. In 1949, he served as minister
of both health and labor. After opposing the coup of Paul Magloire,
he was forced into hiding until an amnesty in 1956.
Elected in 1957
Backed by the Army, Duvalier won the 1957 Haitian
elections; he had campaigned as a populist leader, using a noirist
strategy of challenging the mulatto elite and appealing to the Afro-Haitian
majority.
Duvalier revived the traditions of vodun and later
used them to consolidate his power, claiming to be a houngan himself.
Duvalier deliberately modeled his image on that of Baron Samedi
in an effort to make himself even more imposing; he often donned
sunglasses and talked with the strong nasal tone associated with
the Loa.
Consolidation of power
After surviving an attempted coup in mid-1958,
Duvalier purged the army. He then formed a personal militia in 1959
known as the Voluntary Militia for National Security (MVSN, better-known
as the Tonton Macoutes) which was patterened after the blackshirts
of Fascist Italy. The macoutes made no official salary and as such
made their living through crime and extortion. Duvalier further
formed a group of personal bodyguards known as the Presidential
Guard. In 1961, he rewrote the constitution and then staged a single-candidate
sham election; the official count was 1.32 million votes for Duvalier
and none against. He declared himself President for Life in 1964,
and his regime soon grew to be one of the most repressive in the
hemisphere.
In 1966, Duvalier persuaded the Vatican to allow
him to nominate the Catholic hierarchy for Haiti. On an ideological
level, this perpetuated the notion of black nationalism by allowing
the country to appoint its own bishops. It also allowed Duvalier
to expand his control to encompass religious institutions.
In addition to his pervasive control over Haitian
life, Duvalier also fostered an extensive personality cult around
himself, claiming to be the physical embodiment of the island nation.
Foreign relations
Duvalier's corruption and repression provoked
an unfavorable response from the Kennedy administration in the U.S.,
which attempted to seek a moderate alternative in hopes of preventing
another Cuban-style revolution. However, U.S. pressure and sanctions
against Haiti eased in 1962, as the administration grudgingly accepted
Duvalier as a bulwark against communism. Duvalier would later claim
that Kennedy's assassination had come because he had placed a curse
on him.
In April 1963, Haiti was almost attacked by the
Dominican Republic. However, a lack of senior military support for
Dominican president Juan Bosch prevented the invasion. The conflict
was mediated by the OAS.
Reign of terror
Within the country Duvalier used both political
murder and expulsion to suppress his opponents; estimates of those
killed are as high as 30,000. Attacks on Duvalier from within the
military were treated as especially serious; in 1967 bombs detonated
near the Presidential Palace led to the execution of twenty Presidential
Guard officers. Such tactics kept the country in his grip until
his death in early 1971, leaving his 19-year-old son Jean-Claude
Duvalier as his successor.
Tortuga freeport
Beginning in 1967, Texas entrepreneur Don Pierson
came into contact with representatives of the Haitian government
in Washington, DC, while he was attempting to lease a ship that
had been used by Swinging Radio England broadcasting off the coast
of England. In 1971 this marketing effort resulted in a 99-year
contract being drawn up between financial interests represented
by Don Pierson and the government of Haiti for the development of
a freeport on the island of Tortuga. However, Duvalier died before
the deal was agreed upon.
Jean-Claude Duvalier expropriated the entire venture
after learning of a new multimillion dollar contract between Pierson
and the Gulf Oil corporation, which caused the project to collapse.
Posthumous execution
In 1986, 15 years after his death, Duvalier's
body was exhumed and ritually beaten to "death".
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